Self-Realization Through Meditation€¦ · This book is about self. Ocean in a Drop proposes that...
Transcript of Self-Realization Through Meditation€¦ · This book is about self. Ocean in a Drop proposes that...
OCEAN IN A DROP
Self-Realization Through Meditation
By
Thomas D. Stanks
ISBN-13:978-1515066415
ISBN-10: 15150664X
Dedicated to all my teachers,
especially Helen.
.
CONTENTS
Introduction .............................................................................. 1
Chapter One: What’s It All About? ......................................... 5
Chapter Two: The Great Beginning: Exercises and Breathing 9
Chapter Three: Methods For The Journey Within …….. 13
The Seer………………........... 13
The Settler………………….. ......16
The Searcher………………... ......19
Chapter Four: Self-Acceptance ............................................. 25
Chapter Five: Witnessing ....................................................... 33
Chapter Six: View From A Satellite ...................................... 39
Chapter Seven: Becoming What I Am .................................. 45
Chapter Eight: The ABC’s of Life ........................................ 51
Chapter Nine: The Choice Is Mine:
Judgment Or Love ..................................... 59
Chapter Ten: Willing Wholeness .......................................... 67
Chapter Eleven: Through The Known
To The Unknown ...................................... 73
Bibliography .......................................................................... 83
About the Author ……………………………………… ....... 89
1
INTRODUCTION
This book is about self. Ocean in a Drop proposes that a
person can achieve self-realization by Traveling Within, which
will also improve his performance in society. It is not preachy,
because it believes that only what we experience has power to
change us. It does not call the Journey Within “meditation,”
because that word has been misused and confused with prayer.
This book is scientific in that it does not tell why but
how. It treats not theory but practice. It is not philosophical but
experiential. It is scientific in another sense, in that the reader is
the laboratory: that is, the experiment goes on within.
The title, Ocean in a Drop, was inspired by a comment
made by Lama Govinda. Instead of the drop slipping into the
sea, the sea slips into the drop, the infinite into the finite,
universal consciousness into the human vessel.
“Ocean in a Drop,” as used here, has two meanings.
First, everything I need is already in me. I have but to explore
and discover the tremendous sea that I am. Second, something
needs to be dropped -- namely mind, ego, authority because
when I let go, I find all.
It can truly be told the reader, “You are okay. You are
beautiful. You are fine just the way you are. Your personality,
your mind, your looks, your self are all right.” My say-so will
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pass, however, and does not mean much to you. The same is true
if someone else says it to you. You must say it to yourself and
know it to be true, and that is what the Inward Venture is about.
Only what you experience has the power to change you.
When you experience it, feel it, become one with it, no one can
ever take it from you, because then that is what you are. It needs
no further validation.
This book aims at the practice of tapping the
unconscious to let it become the storehouse of unlimited power.
The balanced person looks inward as well as outward to harness
his full potential.
A religious person may object: “Since you are talking
about unlimited power and universal consciousness, why do you
not mention God or meditation?”
My answer is simple: “I have chosen not to do so.”
There are four reasons for this position. First, some
people are repelled by God and religion. Second, Turning Within
has no religious affiliation. Third, the God-seeker, or naturally
religious person, can find behind the words what he or she is
seeking: “A rose by any other name is just as sweet.” Fourth, I
intend to write a companion volume that will give the religious
underpinnings and goals for the practice of Going Within.
A policy report from the Stanford Research Institute
found that “the basic nature of the universe is consciousness,”
and that man “is a manifestation of universal consciousness.”
Not only has the East long held a similar view, but it has carried
out the practical implication of such a position, which Ocean in a
Drop intends to provide the Western reader -- namely, that only
by experiencing the mind directly will it be satisfied. This is the
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launch that frees us from within, as we explain in the ensuing
chapters.
What we experience daily becomes a part of what we
take within. The principle of self-acceptance, implicit throughout
the book, integrates inner feelings and outer activities without
institutionalizing either.
Though the book is oriented to self-help and to its
inspiration, it offers no gimmicks or magical formulas. The book
leads to action, and the reader will want to put it aside and
Plunge Within, which is the intended purpose. There is only one
teacher -- experience; there is only one pupil -- the reader.
Ocean in a Drop treats the evolvement/expansion of
consciousness and will, and teaches step by step how that might
be accomplished. In its wake come self-acceptance; greater
awareness; confidence in one's ability to reach his potential; love
that expands because it is one's nature; understanding the will
and its role; discovering and becoming what I am; bliss, which is
everyone's birthright; and last, an enticing invitation into the
unknown. All this and more are treated, chapter by chapter, with
the multiple methods of meditation simplified into three basic
approaches.
We know from research and studies in psychology how
little we use of our full potential. Ocean in a Drop says that there
is a creative force within the person, which is the true self, that
can change his life.
The outward search alone is not enough, and the
misunderstanding of the mind's role compounds the problem. At
the end of his life, Albert Einstein said that all great discoveries
involved a leap from the ordinary mind.
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Ocean In a Drop maintains that the greatest discovery
one can make is the finding of oneself. The interior is an
awesome and exhilarating space journey.
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Chapter One
WHAT’S IT ALL ABOUT?
If I were to say that whatever you want, whatever you
need, is available, you would most likely ask how you can get it.
If I went on to say that you will get each thing you want, but
with an exhilarating surprise, you would probably still be for it.
However, if I then added that what you want and need are
obtainable from yourself by Turning Inward, you would
probably turn skeptical.
Right here is the crucial point. The world means so
much to us that we want to make our names and our marks there.
If you are willing to Look Within, to let your own experience be
the ultimate and true judge of value, to achieve absolute and
complete fulfillment in a way that bewilders you, then what
follows is for you.
I do not say it is easy to achieve, although it is possible
for it to happen in a second, but most of us are too conditioned
by our parents and society for it to happen without patience and
work. Although it takes discipline to peel away the layers that
have encrusted the reality that I am, it is not a complex or
confusing practice.
An artist friend of mine, who teaches painting to inner-
city underprivileged children, begins his course with the
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encouraging ground plan that it takes only two requirements to
be able to paint. He asks each child, “Can you see?” and, “Can
you tie your shoestrings?” Needed are vision and manual
dexterity.
Similarly, Turning Inward also has two requirements,
and we must never lose sight of the basic simplicity of the
process. In fact, the more we are convinced of them and the more
we practice them, the quicker the transformation will come.
“Can you be?” and, “Can you be aware?” Existence and
awareness are all it takes to Look Within and be transformed.
There are many reasons why people Look Within. We
are not talking here about thinking or reasoning but about
quieting the mind and achieving oneness, what we have called in
this book Turning Inward. Without trying to be complete, we
would like to give a random list, because they all can be
achieved to varying degrees:
Oneness Relaxation
Freedom Guidance
Knowledge Escape
Openness Stress/Anxiety Reduction
Tolerance Mediumship/Transmediumship
Control Search for God/Finding God
Creativity Healing
Quietness Redirecting energies
Peace Programming
Release Self-motivation
Balance Adjusting
Concentration Goodness/Virtue
Clarity Finding purpose of existence
Love Finding out who I am
Trust Excellence/Realizing my true
potential
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We know that other “reasons” could be added to this list.
If we were to pick one underlying motive for Turning Inward,
we would say that it is self-realization. The realization of self
seems to include the items mentioned above or would lead to
their evolvement.
Although we hold self-realization to be the incentive for
Turning Within, as soon as we begin our exercise, we need to let
all goals drop. The reason for this is that goal-setting, although
necessary in our social living, can cause anxiety. The striving for
a goal can disrupt the peace and relaxation that are absolutely
necessary for effective sitting. The path or what we do is the
goal.
As we grow in our practice, the contradictions and other
difficulties will be resolved. We will see that we cannot be free
as long as we have the yoke of duality around our necks. The
important thing in my sitting is to pass from a conceptual mode
of being to an experiential one -- to be what I am and to be with
what is.
Existence teaches me to experience what it is.
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Chapter Two
BEGIN IN THE BODY: EXERCISES AND BREATHING
There are certain requirements for the Journey Within, as
there are for any discipline. It is a discipline, to be sure, but one
that you come to prize and practice as you taste its results in your
life.
I said in the first chapter that existence and awareness
are essential to inner discovery. We take our existence for
granted, and that is a mistake. There is a reason for it and for the
particular way that you are. Those reasons will dawn on you as
you progress down your unique path. So, being is the first
essential.
The second, to which we also give little attention, is
awareness. Here is where one of the greatest changes takes place
as you faithfully practice Going Within. It is paying attention, or
directing your perception. You are slowly transformed into a
state of dynamic consciousness, not the state of thinking but that
of being free with awareness.
The last two essentials, relaxation and openness, will be
present when you allow your being to be naturally aware; but
because we have made a simple process complex, we need to
facilitate relaxing and openness by exercises and breathing,
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which will be discussed shortly. If you want to be at ease
spiritually and mentally, you must begin in the body.
Just a word about openness, or receptivity, before we
proceed: many call this passivity, or the adoption of a passive
attitude. Our own feeling is that as long as we are directly in
touch with what is going on internally or externally,
experiencing and not thinking about it, we are engaged in one of
the most powerful actions we could perform. While being
steadfastly alert, one must allow the thoughts and images to
come and pass without suppression or pursuit.
To summarize, the proper state for the Journey Inward is
being open in relaxed awareness to inner experience.
To prepare your mind for its endeavor, you need to relax
the body. My Zen teacher once told me that meditation is fifty-
one-percent physical. I did not believe this at the time, but after
many years of practice I have come to realize the wisdom of his
words.
You should try to sit in the same place at the same time
each day. Although this is not absolutely essential, we are
creatures of habit, and habits help make us efficient. What is
more important is to enter the mind somewhere, sometime.
We would also recommend one half-hour in the morning
and the same in the evening. We know this may seem excessive
to many, especially at the beginning. Rather than neglect it
entirely, try ten or fifteen minutes at a time. To spend a brief
period each day is more valuable than a whole hour once or
twice a week. Without babying ourselves, it is important to feel
good and comfortable about what we are doing.
Once you are in your place, you need to do some neck
and shoulder exercises. This may be done by slowly dropping
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the neck as far as it will go without strain in each direction three
times, first forward three times, then backward, then drop your
right ear to the right shoulder, and then your left ear to the left
shoulder. After that it is good to turn the head so that you are
looking over the right shoulder, then stretch the neck as though
to look at the floor behind your right shoulder. If done properly,
this will arch the back while stretching the frontal neck and
shoulder areas. Do it three times in succession, then the same on
the left side.
The last neck exercise is to make three complete circular
motions with the head, first clockwise, then counter-clockwise,
stretching to make the circles as large as possible.
These exercises help relieve eye strain and have been
known to aid people in the improvement of their vision. They
may also help our inner vision. They should be done slowly and
without strain, reaching as far as you can in each direction but
with comfort. Stretching should always feel good.
While doing these exercises, it is very important that you
be attentive to what you are doing. Experience it. Feel it. You
need to be in direct touch with your body, feeling the muscles
stretch in your neck, hearing the little pops and cracks in your
bones or tendons. This oneness with what you feel in the present
moment sets the stage for witnessing your feelings and thoughts
when you get to the silence of consciousness.
Having done the neck and shoulder movements with
care and caution, you are now ready for some deep breathing
exercises. You are going to breathe in through the nostrils and
out through the mouth, slowly and attentively.
At the beginning it is helpful to watch the change in your
body or in that of another. Working with a partner is one of the
best ways to learn proper deep breathing. It is like exercising on
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the ballet barre next to a mirror. If you do not have a partner,
then take your surroundings as a partner.
We often get out of touch with what our bodies are
doing, so we would suggest that you feel with your hands the air
coming in, starting as low as possible, then raising the hands up
the stomach, diaphragm, and chest as the air fills the body cavity.
Tracing the process with the hands puts you further “in touch”
with what is happening. Again, you do not want to think about it
but want to feel it and be aware.
Do the same, but move the hands in reverse order as you
exhale. You are intentionally exaggerating here, drawing in and
pushing out as much air as you can. You want to expel all the air
without strain, tracing the gradual depletion with the hands going
down the body to the caving-in at the vertex of the torso, which
would be the last place for the air to leave.
You should do the complete cycle at least three times.
This breathing to the core helps get rid of residue toxins and
tensions in the body. We often feel lighter and more relaxed after
such breathing. It is beneficial to do it anytime during the day.
The advice to take a few deep breaths when one is angry or
excited is a helpful tip that has a solid physiological basis.
As a final exercise, breathe in through the left nostril
while holding the right one closed with the hand, and breathe out
through the right nostril while holding the left one closed. Next,
breathe in through the right nostril and out through the left while
holding the appropriate nostril closed. This is one complete
cycle. Do it three times to capacity.
Now you can return to breathing normally.
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Chapter Three
METHODS FOR THE JOURNEY WITHIN
There are many methods one could follow in his Journey
Inward, but all must pass away eventually. Technique is only a
temporary vehicle; once we reach a certain state of
consciousness, we depart from the means of transportation.
Most of the methods can be summarized in three basic
approaches. I like to characterize them as the Seer, the Settler,
the Searcher.
The Seer
The Seer just sits and watches. What does he look at?
Anything that comes within the scope of his awareness. Seeing is
listening, feeling, perceiving, as well as watching.
Most of the time after I do my stretching and breathing
exercises, I can feel pressure in my head and neck. It is tension
that has accumulated from my outward-directed activities. As I
turn inward, I can feel my body relaxing, and I go to that
relaxing feeling. If I become aware of the pressure of the chair I
am sitting in, I go to that. If I feel the weight of my hands on my
lap, I give it my full attention. Whatever presents itself to me,
that is my engagement.
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If I am still and quiet, the physical sensations of what
impinges upon me externally will die out, but my mind will still
be active. If the thought arises regarding a customer I talked to
today, I give the thought my attention without trying to solve the
problem or pursue the thinking.
In using this method, it is very important to let go and go
on without stopping anywhere. I do not suppress anything, but
neither do I foster it. If I intentionally suppress something, the
subconscious becomes guarded because of my judgmental role
and closes itself off from further revelation. If I deliberately
pursue a thought, I am wanting something, and I am no longer
the witness.
The true Seer wants to see and know the deeper self, not
solve problems that belong to the functional everyday mind. It is
very easy to get lost in the thoughts or feelings, like an actor
caught up in the drama on stage. When that happens, I gently
resume my seat in the audience and become a spectator again.
No recrimination is necessary, only patience.
It is not a question of right or wrong here, of approval or
disapproval of myself or of what comes to mind. I need to be
open to absolutely everything and hold on to absolutely nothing.
This clarifies my role. If feelings make themselves present in me,
I stay with the feelings. If my mind races with thoughts, I
observe the thought as it arises and let each pass away.
I watch, listen, feel with all my senses, especially the
inner sense, discovering whatever existence presents me. The
lifestream of consciousness is continuous, as there is always
something going on -- a picture, a sound, a thought, a feeling. I
just witness without interior comment until I become one with it
or it disappears.
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I end up spending much of the time just looking at my
mind, which deepens relaxation and the conviction that I am not
my mind. That deepening conviction, so important and so easy to
forget, helps make this my favorite way to sit. It is putting into
continuous action the question, “What am I aware of now?” It is
totally involved in the moment, in the here and now, making the
path the goal. It is accepting reality as it is.
After sitting much, after the unconscious gets the
message that I am serious, many things come up naturally that
could not come up at the beginning. It may be such a thing as
anger, fear, or desire that the unconscious knows I can now face.
When these emotions do surface, I stay with the thought or
feeling and watch it as I do anything else.
Before, I rejected it or denied its existence. Now I see
that it is just a part of me seeking acceptance. I look at it, see it
from every side, and become one with it as long as its energy
persists in my awareness. I can now deal with it and overcome it,
because I accept it in the open field of consciousness.
This type of sitting reminds me very much of a rose.
This beautiful flower appears passive, but it must be and is
sensitive to all its surroundings. Its roots are not only in touch
with but are firmly embedded in the earth, taking the water and
minerals that it offers. It turns its face into the sun and will do so
many times, even in the course of a single day, so responsive is it
to its warmth and life-giving rays.
It welcomes the rain and is always fresher afterward.
The whole plant is a living and breathing organism, exchanging
gifts with its environment in a beautiful, purposeful plan. It is in
tune with the forces that make it what it is, taking and yet giving
its red and perfumed loveliness to the world. By an internal
process it transforms totally foreign elements into a unique
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creation. The same miracle takes place through the choiceless
awareness of the one who faithfully practices this method.
The Settler
The next method to consider is what I have entitled the
Settler. I have so named it because the person has settled upon a
particular device for holding his attention and constantly returns
to it when he realizes he has been distracted.
The device may be counting or following the breath,
repeating a mantra, gazing at a mandala or a candle, using white
light, reiterating an affirmation or a meaningful phrase or a
passage from Scripture, or holding on to a quality such as love or
patience. Any one of these can be used to baffle and quiet the
mind by its utter simplicity, which concentrates the awareness
and centers the person. It is like giving a dog a bone that
captivates and rivets his attention from all else.
The device has what might be called a funneling effect,
as it reduces all thoughts to one thought, all feelings to one
feeling. The eventual bridging between that one and the absolute
consciousness is then easier.
Implementing a device illustrates a general principle that
operates in any method. Two things happen simultaneously. A
magician captures our attention and directs it to his right hand by
pulling an elongated brilliant crimson scarf from his pocket.
Meanwhile and unbeknown to us, his left hand is preparing a
rabbit behind his back that will suddenly appear out of
“nowhere.”
So also the mind's attention is tricked as it is tranquilized
and brought to one pointedness by the device employed.
Meanwhile and unbeknown to us, our latent higher
consciousness gathers and positions its forces behind the scenes.
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Becoming absorbed in the object of attention alters the state of
consciousness and allows the deeper self to emerge.
By constantly reverting to a single theme, I am letting
the knower in me perform its function of knowing while the
scattered and discursive activity of the mind is reduced to a
minimum or eliminated. There are untold billions of objects in
the universe, and I have settled on one. It is literally a kingdom
of “thingdom” without a center. Only I can give it a center
through my witnessing capacity. The looker is the center.
Similarly, there are an inestimable number of thoughts
constantly coursing through my mind, and only I can center their
activity, which at the same time centers me. The power is in the
watcher. Whether I am looking at a tree with my eyes or at a
picture of the tree in my mind, the observer is the same. This
holds true whether I am looking at something beautiful or ugly,
feeling joy or hurting with sorrow, busy at work or taking a
walk. Witnessing centers.
In choosing to watch rather than want, another psychic
power -- love -- which is indispensable to any method, becomes
operative. By constantly reverting the mind's movements to a
simple and ordinary thing like breathing, I subordinate the ego to
a specific activity of centering, which allows for wider
consciousness to break through.
Egolessness is love, and the power of love permits the
miracle to happen. I move to something greater than myself --
absolute consciousness -- and the practice of willfully centering
my love is an acknowledgment and reinforcement of this. Once
the ground has been prepared, things happen naturally to the
Settler, because he is ready.
The great danger here is in belittling the homing device,
not taking seriously or not having confidence in its power to
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transform me. The atom is so small as to be invisible, yet the
power it unleashes when taken seriously is so great as to be
unbelievable. What happens in implementing a particular device
is a focused surrender of the powers of consciousness and will
that brings about an exploding release or gradual unfolding of
these powers. It is a single-minded strength of will. It takes
discipline and persistence. Dripping water can wear away solid
rock and eventually create canyons.
The Settler chooses a “place of residence” to his liking.
He trusts that putting down roots in this way will eventually bear
fruit. He does not look for anything special to happen. There are
no problems to solve. If a question arises, he rests in the mystery
of it rather than try to answer it. Insights may occur, but these
also are taken in stride. Whenever there is a choice of what to
watch, the Settler returns to the particular instrument he has
chosen.
To center myself, I need to find a stratagem that is to my
liking, something that is close to me and yet blazes a trail to my
greatest aspirations. If everything in the world gives off its own
frequency, there is certainly something that can attune me for
deeper harmony. It may be an object of sight that captivates me,
a sound that soothes my soul, a phrase that evokes feelings of
love or peace.
No one can say what is best suited for another or what
answers to the awareness within another. I must find the tuning
fork that resonates in me and then stick to it. A device has to be
used for some time and taken seriously if it is to work, even
though one may use different implements at various stages of his
life.
Once I have made my selection, I should use that tool in
my daily sessions. This does not mean I necessarily have to refer
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to it all through the allotted period. Some freedom is desirable,
and one must find what works best for himself. If the allocated
time is to be one half-hour, many practicers will count or follow
their breathing for only the first five or ten minutes to help bring
about the relaxed state of mental silence or awareness.
As I used the example of a rose to describe the Seer
method, I see certain features in a robin that help illustrate the
Settler method. A robin has a highly developed nest-building
instinct. In fact, a single robin may build a dozen nests or more
in the egg-laying season. Moreover, it will often build those
nests in or among the artifacts that man has provided, such as
stairways, attics, and garages. He seems very much at home in
civilized surroundings.
It does not matter whether there is one nest or many, the
internal demand is to return to a source. A robin builds a nest
that becomes its home. The nest actually turns into a homing
device as the robin constantly returns there to build, nurture, and
be nurtured. The one practicing a Settler technique similarly
returns to his nurturing source to build and draw inner power to
himself.
The Searcher
The third and last method is called the Searcher. He is so
named because asking questions and seeking answers is the
format of his Journey Inward.
All answers are within, we said in the first chapter, and
they do reveal themselves to the true seeker. One must first of all
be confident that his interiority is transparent to the pursuing
consciousness, and second, that he has the perseverance for such
a task. This book is based on the premise that the solution to
life's deepest mysteries lies within. “Who am I?” is a question
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that demands not a correct answer but a full and personal
response.
There is a popular song entitled “I've Never Been to
Me.” The singer has been all over the world and experienced
many pleasures and sorrows, but his lament is that he has never
been to himself. He missed, as so many of us do, the pearl of
great price.
The anguish in many hearts today is this lack of self-
possession. The question “Who am I?” or “What am I?” springs
from such a recognition. We feel that we do not know or own
ourselves.
All actions come from being. I have to return to the
source. I need to let things come out of my own being. The
answer to the mystery lies not in what I do but in what I am. My
being is permanent. In a deep alert state I know that it is beyond
space and time. I am the goal. What I have to do is reach myself.
Because my own being has become stratified, the
barriers to being whole need to be removed. Truth cannot be
invented, only uncovered. Now being is aware of itself in me;
otherwise I would not be alive. It knows what I need and keeps
me living. Since life lives itself in me, I need to go to it. Its
depths are unconscious, but by asking and waiting, I will be
satisfied.
The question becomes a probing tool, similar to a device
used in the Settler method, but now it is shaped and pointed for a
particular task. Whereas the Seer and the Settler wait for the fruit
to ripen, the Searcher hastens the ripening process.
The other requirements still hold. He must be open in
relaxed awareness, and a part of genuine openness is the
willingness to wait. When the appropriate state of mind-being is
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present, the mystery will unfold. I know of nothing closer to me
than my own unconscious, which looks out for my welfare and
will not reveal itself until I am ready. The old proverb applies to
my interiority: “When the pupil is ready, a teacher will come
along.”
I will not be ready until I drop ego and thinking and
enter the state of immediate awareness. When I hold nothing and
just am, the unconscious will become conscious. When the
answer comes, it will be tailor-made for me and have my name
written all over it. That is so because I was the programmer of
my own unconscious. This is why such an answer is indisputable
and needs no authority outside myself for its validation.
When the unconscious reveals itself, the question
dissolves, and I will be different. Once the answer comes, I start
to live and grow in that answer. I can ask many questions, but
the answers depend upon my capacity. The more of a mirror I
become, the more I can behold.
As we took samples from nature to illustrate the first two
methods, I believe the raccoon is an apt example to highlight the
characteristics of the Searcher. The raccoon is active and
frequently on the move. His senses are acute, which makes him a
marvelous inquisitor. Hearing is highly tuned, and he is very
sensitive to what he sees. He may be seen pacing through the
woods, a small grayish-brown searcher with bushy ringed tail
and nose sniffing in the air.
Particularly developed is his sense of touch with his little
probing fingers. He is a land creature but is always found near
water. He is extremely inquisitive, even to the point of feeling
under a rock for a crayfish in shallow water with those small
searching fingers while looking downstream at the sights. He is
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not a vicious animal, but his inquisitiveness will take him into
chimneys, garages, and garbage cans. He adapts well and learns.
The Searcher who Journeys Within finely attunes
himself to his world, and his delving clears the way for ultimate
oneness with it.
The purpose of the Seer, the Settler, or the Searcher is to
discover a new world, to establish a new state of consciousness.
A method is needed, because my mind has been conditioned.
Once I get outside that conditioning, the mind will find a new
home. It will just happen, like a gift.
The method, then, is implemented to get me to the
silence or awareness of pure consciousness. The instruments are
precious antiques that have come down through the ages, yet
they are ever useful, because consciousness is the same. Only
conditioning has changed.
The tools are instruments of power designing a new
home within me. Once the creation is achieved, I reside there,
and the scaffolding devices fall away. Whatever mechanism I
use, the reality naturally arises -- oneness, wholeness, openness,
purposefulness, belonging, love -- but each must find his or her
own way. There is no substitute for this.
Along the way all kinds of sights and sounds may arise.
As my consciousness grows less fearful, the unconscious will
reveal more. The energies that have blocked me can one day rise
for my benefit.
I may choose to bring up certain things, to express
myself about them to myself, and then to listen. I may feel
separate from my body or apart from my mind. I may at times
even see a white light or be suffused in light. The feeling of well-
being will increase even while other things are happening
23
simultaneously in my consciousness. All these are phenomena to
be experienced and dropped as I pursue the discovery of what
the mind is without a thought.
The Journey Inward is like painting a self-portrait. Only
certain colors apply, while others cannot be used. Patient sitting
will bring out my true colors. When I have the technique that is
right for me, the real self emerges, and I will change. Whatever
my state in life, whatever vocation I have, I will not be the same.
There will be a newness and a strangeness. I will feel energy and
have a different outlook on life.
Life is a series of sounds. It becomes a melody if the key
is love. I Travel Within only because I do not know how to love.
Going Inward teaches me that I am love. The object of the sun's
shining is not the earth, even though our world happens to pass
in its rays. The sun has no object; it just shines. Love is my
nature, and that can be seen when thoughts and objects disappear
in the silence of pure consciousness.
The sense of smell is alerted only when perfume passes
by or coffee is brewing. Then I quickly follow the scent to the
object, less intent about what is happening within me; but the
sense of smell is always a part of me, objects present or not.
Love is always there as well, and it intensifies as there is no
energy drain to passing objects.
The more I can bring to the sessions when I Journey
Within, the faster and deeper the process of consciousness
expansion and personal growth. Ultimate consciousness is in
touch with all; I am in touch with only a part. If I have freedom
in hand, I will be more free as I touch the world around me and
will help liberate others.
If I trust, I will be more trusting, and people will become
more confident. If I accept, I will be more accepting, which will
24
melt other people's fears -- but the greatest thing I can have is
love. If my heart is in my hand as I touch the world, it will
transform myself and others in a way that is unimaginable.
The generator of the transforming process is the quiet
gaze inward, so the focus of this book is on the practice of
Looking Within to learn and grow. It is hoped that the reading
creates a sense of anticipation. It is further hoped that the reading
leads to doing, resolving expectancy through experience.
25
Chapter Four
SELF-ACCEPTANCE
The range of the reachable is limitless. A child knows no
limits except those his elders have placed on him. He thinks the
universe is for his asking. In a sense, we must become like
children.
All it takes is looking, listening, and feeling, not the
thinking, competing, and pushing of the stressful world. The
most fundamental core of my being consists of awareness,
openness, receptivity, a spirit of welcome. What I cannot remove
myself from is my own awareness. That, then, is my true self, or
at least an indispensable part of my true self.
Since awareness is what I am, it has more power than
anything else I could muster. I must let its penetrating light
pierce the darkness within. Once I am comfortable, relaxed, and
prepared to Look Within, I let the searchlight of my mind, my
awareness, play on whatever is there.
Awareness is feeling the tightness in my neck. It is
watching the smile on my face and my daughter's face when she
comes to me. It is staying with the anger I felt at the boss today.
It is witnessing whatever is present to me now. It is staying with
26
the present. Let the energies of the day, of my life, of my future
wash over me, and watch them.
As is implied in these examples, awareness is not just
watching. It is listening and feeling. It is entering into the energy
that is there. I cannot suppress what is hateful and hold on to the
beautiful. I must remain with my anger, my greed, or whatever it
is. I must acknowledge that it is present. It is real, and I can
never run from reality.
In fact, I must go further and accept it. This is not a
judgment of its goodness or badness, merely an acceptance of
the reality of the situation. It is there, and it is a part of me.
This may be the hardest part of Looking Within, but it is
the crucible wherein I am transformed. I must be careful not to
separate myself from what I think and say and do. As long as I
deny things, I cannot deal with them. I have to accept myself as I
am.
I do not want to do this, because then the lust or the hate
is me, not just something on the periphery, something I do. The
truth is that anger and hostility are part of my makeup. I must
admit and accept that I have the potential to be a demon.
This is often where fear enters, but I must stay with it
and say, “I am so.” With my hand on the knob of the door
leading within, I come face to face with myself, and I can be
petrified. A woman questioning me on meditation said she is
afraid to look within herself.
The question that must be answered here is, “Do I really
believe I can find the answers I need by Going Within?” No one
can answer for another, but for me the Inward Journey was and
is the only way.
27
We find it difficult to leave the outer, because we do not
trust or accept ourselves. The California State Psychological
Association Task Force on Spirituality and Psychotherapy says
that “spirituality is the courage to look within and to trust1.”
This very trust is discoverable within. Trust is not a
belief but an experience. Not on someone else's authority but on
my own do I trust life and existence itself. I have made the truth
my own, and at last I am free. If one says he believes in God yet
does not trust life and existence, I question his faith.
The unconscious is constantly feeding the conscious
materials to overcome my fears, but I remain unnourished,
because I do not know how to Listen Within. Listening to others'
truths can never free me. I make my own misery, which comes
largely from lack of self-acceptance. I do not accept myself as I
am, which includes leaving virtually untouched a whole inner
world of power to transform.
Probably the greatest act of love I could perform is to
accept myself unconditionally right now the way I am but I do
not do that. I first want to change this, modify that, and bring
another item into line. What this is saying is that I have not yet
thanked existence for my existence.
I am well on my way to inner transformation if I am
truly thankful for my being, but if I cannot be grateful, I at least
have to accept the fact of my existence. I am the way I am, and
there is a deep reason for that. I may not be loving, or I may be
gregarious. I may not be introspective, or I may be a born leader.
Regardless, I still have to accept what I am and go from there.
1 Edward P. Shafranske, “Factors Associated with the Perception of Spirituality in
Psychotherapy,” Journal of Transpersonal Psychology, Vol. 16, no. 2 (1984): p.
233.
28
Inner gratitude is such a dynamic and embracing quality,
we need to take a closer look at it. It is difficult, if not
impossible, to be greedy and grateful at the same time.
Gratefulness, when present, is so permeating that it excludes
anger or hate or vengefulness or any other such leaning.
Once I have acquired the thankful bent, I begin to count
my blessings. I now know how to look at a flower, my spouse,
successes, difficult situations.
Even problems become opportunities for my own growth,
because I am no longer fighting what existence has presented to
me.
Here is where I can deceive myself with ideals,
especially religious ideals2. By my “holding” or “proclaiming”
them, I do not change. It is easier to have ideals, because then I
do not have to work on myself. The models themselves will
transform me, and always sometime in the future.
These ideals are a very nice tool with which to condemn
others. We do not see the double standard at work. Since I have
them, it is very easy to blame others who do not practice them.
Dick Cavett said that if the Mona Lisa was about to be
destroyed by fire and I could save it or the worst Nazi war
criminal, I would have to choose the criminal. The reason is that
I dare not separate him or myself from our common humanity. If
he has chosen to do so, I cannot. Two wrongs do not make a
right. My responsibility begins with myself. I have to allow him
his choice, but my evil begins when I say, “I am not like that.” I
2 For adaptation of Tantric principles, I am indebted to Bhagwan Shree
Rajneesh, The Book of the Secrets, 5 vols. (Harper & Row, N.Y., N.Y., 1974),
I:l97-207. For further information, consult the reference list in the back of the
book.
29
must take the werewolf I have, let it know who is master, and
make a lap dog out of it.
In Looking Within, I have to stay with myself. I do not
condemn others, nor do I condemn myself. The energy that has
brought me to this point can be redirected, but only if I recognize
my stance. I cannot take a step except from the one I am on.
How can I control something that I deny? If I say,
“That's not me,” then I am not there. To overcome a problem, I
have to admit I have one. I may carry an onerous burden for a
lifetime just because I do not admit I have a problem. If I admit
it and accept it, I am free. In true acceptance is forgiveness, and I
have to forgive myself as well as others.
Nothing suppressed can be surpassed; anything accepted
can be. Acceptance's gift is transcendence. There are different
degrees of acceptance, of course, and complete acceptance
means completion.
Taming my werewolves gives insight to a very important
phenomenon taking place as I gaze within, and that is the
balancing between my masculine and feminine principles. I need
to be stern in domesticating a wild animal, but I also need to
show it love and concern. With the right degree of firmness and
fellowship, a dog can be brought to do heroic things for people,
even to the point of dying to save a human life.
One must treat himself the same way -- accepting,
loving, and nurturing that half of his psyche that he has not
developed. For one who is macho-oriented, man or woman, it
may demand a more sensitive attitude toward others and oneself.
For an overly feminine mode of conduct, it may require being
less coy and more forthright.
30
It has been said that native Americans had the
masculine-feminine balanced to a higher degree than did the
white man. In society the braves and squaws had their respective
roles to play. In the higher perceptions, however, with which we
are dealing here, they were strong, courageous, and at the same
time very open and receptive. We might say they were very
sensitive to the world that was alive in and around them.
Is believing that trees, rocks, and the sky are alive so
different from what quantum physics reveals, namely that the
most basic “stuff” of the universe is not matter but energy and
that the subatomic particle is not the basic unit of nature but part
of an interlocking system of subtle connections that also include
the witness? Highly sensitive people know that everything is
“alive” and gives off its own pattern of vibrations and energy.
The two extremes to be avoided in dealing with our
minds, which will be patterned after the way we deal with others,
are: (1) the “tough guy” approach, which says, “You can't push
me around”; and (2) the whimpering, frightened bunny rabbit
cowering in the corner. The mind will seek its own protection in
countless ways, because the ego is involved.
An old Oriental saying states that a person on the Inward
Journey must give the cow -- the mind -- a large pasture. Long
years of conditioning have established patterns of behavior that
war against each other, and if we try to use force, we will only
add to the conflict. Continuous study of the mind's operations
will diminish the power of the fighting factions; then a feeling of
peace and calm will enter, and there will be increasing harmony
among all the elements that do make up our minds. The example
of the cow in the large pasture is an apt image.
This chapter thus far has said that self-acceptance is a
key to Traveling Within, that the attitude of gratitude facilitates
31
self-acceptance, that we need to balance the masculine and
feminine principles in our lives, and that we need to give the
mind room to roam -- but how does all this happen? How can
you activate these qualities so that you may pursue the Inner
Journey to self-realization?
To be truthful, it is bizarre and inexplicable how it
happens, but it does. The methods discussed in Chapter Three
tap your deepest resources to bring forth power and illumination.
This has been proven over thousands of years for untold numbers
of people, but it is not true for you until you practice it and
accomplish it. You simply have to go within.
It is an experience. Seeing the Grand Canyon is
altogether different from hearing about it. Talking or reading is
one thing, the occurrence something else. Until you go within,
you cannot see how the results take place.
A good method for deeper self-acceptance is to use your
own name as a centering device. After you have completed the
stretching and breathing exercises and are open and relaxed, say
your name the first time aloud, then repeat it to yourself slowly
again and again. You are accepting the name and yourself. You
are saying “yes” to reality.
It does not matter whether you like your name or not. It
is irrelevant as you acknowledge the facts of existence of the
moment. Be totally in the present. The “newness” that you put
into practice has an efficacy of its own that will carry over into
the rest of your day. You will be more immediately “present” to
incidents, problems, and people as they occur. In time it will not
take courage to Look Within; it will be foolish not to do so.
An alternative to repeating your name for greater self-
acceptance is to concentrate attention on a personality or
character trait that you are not fond of or a part of your body that
32
you dislike. A woman in our self-acceptance class focused on
her “bloatedness” of the past week to try to understand why she
was so edgy and irritable. She had similar weeks in the past and
suspected that there was more to it than the surface symptoms.
She stayed with her discomfort in the present, and what
dawned on her was that she had not really come to grips with the
fact that she was in her thirties, divorced, and had never given
birth to a child, all of which bothered her. While still sitting in
her relaxed and recollected position, she noticed that the man in
front of her was large with broad shoulders, and she knew that
she could never be attracted to a man like that. She realized that
her father was a big man and had beaten her earlier in life; she
still carried that resentment with her.
This led to flashes of her home life, which was not
happy. Laughter was frowned upon. Now, in her adult life, she
knew that she liked to laugh and did so frequently. I kidded her
that laughter was like internal jogging, and she laughed heartily.
What was happening, and these incidents serve to
illustrate, is that the woman was seeing more and more of her
life for what it really was. Through the power of bringing her full
calming awareness to the situation and remaining with the
energy evoked, she was able to accept and remake her life,
changing from the woman who had been shaped by others into
one of her own design. Through the vitalizing insights obtained,
she is no longer fearful and is excited to make her own path.
33
Chapter Five
WITNESSING
There is an interesting and dynamic psychological fact
that becomes operative as I Turn Within: I cannot watch and
want at the same time.
Easterners recognize this power and use it to the full.
Maybe we Westerners do not care to employ it because we want
so much and can achieve so much on the outside. I think it is this
very capability that makes us unaware of the potency of our
witnessing energy. It behooves us to look penetratingly, because
once a person truly sees and knows something, he may decide he
never really wanted it after all.
A man's life is like a screen, and what he looks at all the
time are the colored slides projected on the screen. There are
millions of images, sights, and sounds coming from television,
the newspaper, the radio, his friends, his occupation, his
recreation. We are constantly bombarded and take little or no
time to look at the projector of all these images -- the mind.
The mind is basically a process that has been created
from outside. We did not start it and cannot stop it. I repeat, we
cannot stop it.
34
It is important to realize how much we are manipulated
by our own minds. To demonstrate this, close your eyes and see
how long you can keep your attention on some one thing, say the
number at the bottom of this page. Very few can maintain
uninterrupted attention beyond ten seconds. No matter how
many private werewolves one has in his den, the mind is the
wildest and woolliest of all.
I wish to note here that if this were possible, if one could
bring the full force of his mind and all its energy to bear on a
single point, all kinds of things could be achieved. It does not
matter if the object of concentration is the wound of Christ, your
pain, or my breathing; an abundance of energy has been
harnessed and directed. Relaxed observing is so powerful
because it roots us in our center -- consciousness or witnessing
being what we essentially are.
We might compare the mind's power of concentration
with a magnifying glass that captures the rays of the sun and
points them at kindling paper. This is what is possible with the
development of the mind. Before starting such a conflagration,
however, there are many other fires that one can start in himself
before bringing the mind to a standstill.
The fact that we cannot stop the mind and can control it
only within limitations should prompt us to recognize that any
real power must come from beyond the mind itself, and that is
what witnessing brings. As I said, one cannot stop the mind, but
it can slow down and stop of its own accord by my watching it in
action.
By constantly fixing my gaze on the mind, I gradually
become more objective in regard to it. I see how it flits from
flower to flower like a butterfly. Just by watching these antics, I
begin to disengage myself. The object cannot be the subject; the
35
painting cannot be the painter; the music cannot be the
conductor.
One day it dawns on me that my mind is not my identity.
I am not my mind. It is not me, just as my body is not me. As a
pain in my neck is not me, so thoughts in my head are not me.
Since I have already recognized that I did not start my mind and
cannot stop it, it makes sense that my mind does not belong to
me the way money in my wallet does.
The realization that I am not my mind releases a new
energy in me and gives me a power I have not recognized. My
innate force had been short-circuited by the self-important tones
and parades that my mind had devised. The mind will go on, as it
has a life of its own, but now it no longer dominates me. It is at a
distance. I can listen to it, but I do not have to follow it. Before,
it was a motor running me. Now I run the motor.
To stretch the point a bit, a person's mind is like Hal, the
computer in 2001: A Space Odyssey. Hal ran the spaceship so
long and so efficiently, he ended up thinking he was the
spaceship. The mind performs a great job at what it does, and it
is absolutely necessary for my functioning and well-being, but I -
- the spaceship -- am meant to explore far more than what my
mind is limited to.
I am greater than my mind. Mind is relative, but
consciousness is absolute. In my inner exploration, similar to
infinite space, I join hands, so to speak, with basic
consciousness. The mind needs to be occupied, and I let it play
its games. Now that I no longer identify with my mind and what
is in it, I have broken its enchainment and all the energy it took
36
to run it. The energy that is unleashed allows a higher self to be
born, which is true consciousness.3
How does this come about, you ask? How do you reach
your higher or true consciousness? Again, it is strange and
difficult to explain, because one cannot see and touch the will or
consciousness. The will plays a major role, and a full chapter
will be devoted to it later. Suffice it here to say that the force that
lies within you is part of the propulsion found everywhere in the
universe, and you are free to connect up with this universal
force.
To think and act as though this universal will does not
exist would be the same as saying that you have something not
existing in the universe, which would be laughable were it not so
pitiful. The pity is that you lock yourself out and cannot
experience the glorious integration of your will into the Way,
your limited consciousness into higher consciousness.
Again, it is up to you. You must pursue it by allowing
yourself to be a steadfast witness. The method to be practiced
here is the Seer technique. Zen calls this method “just sitting.” It
is sitting characterized by intense but relaxed watchfulness.
I am reminded of in incident that took place in my grade
school back in the late thirties. I believe we had a full moon the
night before, and the next day we were discussing it with our
3 Joel Goldsmith arrives at the same conclusions from a different approach as he
describes the inner experience: “You must bring your mind to a place of stillness
where the mind is transcended....” It is necessary to “turn within to the I at the
Center, to the Consciousness, and then forth from this Consciousness will come
whatever is necessary to his individual unfoldment, which may not in any way be
another's unfoldment. Everyone has to go within to the Center of his being, the
Consciousness of his own being, and draw forth that which represents the
fulfillment of his individuality.” Joel Goldsmith, Beyond Words and Thoughts, (The
Citadel Press, Secaucus, N.J., 1974), pp. 9, 176.
37
teacher. One student made the remark that the moon looked like
a man's face, which prompted me to ask the question whether
man will ever be able to go to the moon.
The answer came quickly and firmly. “No, man will
never be able to go to the moon, and here's why.”
Our teacher proceeded to enumerate the reasons:
(1) The fastest an airplane can travel is
approximately 350 mph.
(2) We cannot build a plane big enough to carry
the gasoline and food needed for such a
long trip.
(3) The crew would run out of oxygen.
(4) The earth's gravity prevents escaping earth's
atmosphere.
(5) Once he got there, if that were possible, there
could be no way of getting back.
I must say that the teacher, with her explanations, gave
me a satisfactory answer for the time. She listed the pertinent and
restricting data according to the resources available then; but we
know that man has gone to the moon and returned.
A rocket can travel far faster than an airplane. Solid fuel
replaced gasoline. Space suits and pressurized cabins take care of
oxygen and other problems. As for gravity, it is a limited barrier.
Once enough thrust is generated to penetrate its confining shield,
the spaceship is free to travel.
We might say that new laws with a new way of thinking
and operating came into play that propelled man to the moon.
The old system was certainly inadequate for the task, and by its
laws man would never be able to reach the moon.
38
Similarly, you follow one set of laws for your daily life,
which cannot indicate how the inner life of consciousness works.
A whole new set of laws with a new way of knowing come into
play when you Travel Within. It is as though you have escaped
the pull of gravity and have been jettisoned into the wild blue
yonder -- but you will never know it until you go Within and
prove it to yourself.
You have to pilot your own spaceship. The will to watch
reveals the way.
39
Chapter Six
VIEW FROM A SATELLITE
In this state of higher consciousness, it can be said that
we are becoming more conscious of the unconscious. Since
conscious and unconscious are not places but functions,
however, it is better to say we are becoming more aware or less
aware of experience. What we are aiming at is direct, immediate
experience.
To achieve this, a technique is valid that gets us beyond
thoughts, authority, and ego. When these stifle us, we can heed
the directive of a Zen master:
“A special tradition outside the
scriptures, No dependence upon words
and letters, Direct pointing at the soul of
man, Seeing into one's own nature and
the attainment of enlightenment.”4
“Becoming” a flower can shatter thinking, authority, and
the ego at once -- the soft velvety feel of the petals, the light
4 Attributed to Bodhidharma, cited by Thomas Merton, Mystics and Zen Masters,
(Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, N.Y., 1967), p. 15.
40
delicate fragrance in the air, its translucence in my hands in the
sun, brushing a petal against my cheek as I feel the support of the
other petals all around me, knowing that I am part of the whole.
Go slowly, without thinking or verbalizing. Feel the
silken smoothness. Only if you are unhurried can you be aware.
The softness can enter through the fingertips and be felt all over
the body. A distinct softness is spreading in ripples. When you
feel the softness, become that softness. For this practice it is
good to pick an item of your own choice that already shows your
oneness with existence.
As soon as we say, “The flower is beautiful!” we are out
of experience and into our heads. We have broken immediate
contact. To be aware of the flower does not mean to think about
it. This also holds true for my breathing, for meeting a loved one,
or for anything else. Once I think about breathing, the loved one,
or something else, I am no longer aware of each respectively I
need to be open to let each impinge directly upon me for what it
is at the time.
Thinking is about, verbalization is about, even poetry is
about. Experience is not about anything. It is. Music is so
transforming and at times uplifting because it is more
experiencing than being about something. The mind must stop
chattering, because its static keeps interfering with the melody of
life.
Even the world's great myths -- Krishna, Buddha, Jesus,
Moses, Mohammed -- however true and inspiring, are still about
something. They set the path for us, not to follow them but to
become what they were. True religion is not imitation but
realization.
When the consciousness experiences, it is not the mind
or the intellect having a thought or concept about something.
41
When I really become aware of breathing, of a flower, of a loved
one, something drops. I am no longer cognizant that “I am doing
this.” The ego-mind vanishes, and the subject-object dichotomy
disappears. I am thrown out of myself, and oneness is created.
After the drop, I am aware that all is there. Then all is there in
my spouse, in my work, in my eating, in hitting the tennis ball.
My wife and I have played a lot of tennis, and we often
team up as partners. As a team, when there is a break in the
action, Helen will often say to me or I to her, “Don't think. Don't
try.” Thinking about anything distracts and takes us out of the
flowing experience. If we think, we are no longer in the present
moment. Also, trying creates tension that interferes with the
relaxed state in which we play so well.
The twin remarks are a counsel to concentrate on the ball
and to become one with the tennis ball. It does not always
happen, but when the identification takes place, I play my best
tennis. The ball gets larger, due to the fact that it now commands
so much of my attention. I am able to see the seams just before
my racket makes contact. The ball also slows down.
Hurry and urgency cease, even though I am in the heat
of play. It is as if everything is in slow motion. I know exactly
where Helen is at the net. There is plenty of time to run across
the back court to get to the ball. The racket comes back as I bend
my knees. I turn my body around and smoothly swing into and
through the ball. I can even decide as I am swinging where to hit
the ball, and it goes unfailingly to that spot.
I am aware of all this peripherally, while the center of
my concentration is still the ball. Nothing else exists, and the
energy flows in all directions. There is an expanded awareness
while being completely relaxed.
42
In rare moments when my whole being is focused this
way, there is such a centering that nothing else is a factor. Even
the score or the game does not matter. Every point, every action
is exactly as it should be. No question arises. There is no
disagreement with others or with myself. How can one disagree
with what is? Being one with what is, there is nothing more to
add.
The ball, the game, my wife is a fact, a presence. The
mind, however, automatically changes experience into thoughts
and words, and it does this while the action is still going on.
These thoughts-words then come between me and the
experience. I “think” of how it should be or “want” myself to be
otherwise, in relation to the situation. Here is the beginning of
illusion.
The world is not an illusion, but the way we see it often
is. My grasp of the world is falsified by my own distortion. I
place my thought images onto people and situations; then I read
them stamped with my own imprint. Instead of experiencing
people and things, I am only in touch with thoughts and words.
The illusion comes from misinterpreting the world
according to my own predispositions in order to protect my
fragile and fearful ego. It is the desired image, veiling my
perception, that creates my own passion and anxiety. I can no
longer experience the total other, because I am no longer total
myself. Too much has clouded my vision for me to see clearly.
The biggest clouds are my own desires and fears, which have
blocked out the clear blue sky of awareness.
We need to move from a conceptual mode of behavior to
an experiential one. Even visualization is not experiencing.
Visualization imagines or conceptualizes. Usually it is not a
spontaneous happening within the consciousness, but something
43
the mind chooses to picture. Helpful as this may be at times, it is
not the technique discussed here, which says to be with the
sensations of the moment, not adding anything or expecting
anything. If we were alert and aware, we would not need to deal
with attentiveness. We would have our unconscious and
superconscious the way we now have our conscious.
The practice of Turning Within is obviously not the
same as the process of life, but this “choiceless awareness,” as it
has been called, is the basis for bringing together life and
practice and is the foundation of self-discovery. In relaxed
witnessing I learn, perhaps for the first time, to see things as they
really are.
How freeing it is to enter an arena where there is no
judgment or fear! I do not interfere or evaluate; I do not project
or expect. The moment I judge or choose or the moment I set up
a purpose, watching has come to an end. The “magic” of
penetrating the unconscious by the conscious has been broken.
This cultivation of observation is eminently practical,
because it reveals what my unconscious has sought or avoided.
The mind that is ever churning is brought to a state of rest by the
naked attention. An untrained mind automatically reacts to what
it wants or resists. It is forever clinging to what it likes and averts
what it dislikes. These desires and aversions are what tires one
out.
What a boon it would be if we could measure the mental
fatigue that comes from grasping and resisting! Not only are they
exhausting, but greed and hatred create tension, and that tension
leads to even greater fatigue.
By being mindful, however, I can see and feel myself
responding. I notice myself going out for what I want and pulling
back from what I dislike. I am aware within but also outside. It is
44
like a view from a satellite of all that is happening. When I see
myself and learn how I react, I no longer am compelled to a
certain course of action. I become centered.
Gradually the awareness spreads from the times when I
am focused inward to all my activities during the day. I become
amazed by how much I missed before. The value of everything
goes up, not for any intrinsic reason but because of what I bring.
Flashes revealing the meaning of a statement, the solution to a
knotty problem, the specific course of action to be taken -- these
and other insights now facilitate my responses, because I am
now discerning on a wider front and deeper level. People will
begin to notice my sensitivity, and I will begin to live fully and
wholeheartedly in each moment.
Experiencing human consciousness is something like
one blade of grass being picked out of all the blades of grass in
the world.
45
Chapter Seven
BECOMING WHAT I AM
The interior is an awesome and exhilarating place. I say
“place” for lack of a better term.
There is action. The being I am becoming must emerge
from all that has held it under wraps. There is much to
experience, and usually I experience only a bit at a time. As I
practice, I set the stage, create the scene for the drama that is to
be lived and let go of within.
Not only can the practice be arduous at times, but what I
confront is often painful. The energies that have blocked me will
one day rise, or I can intentionally summon them for the purpose
of doing battle with them -- greed, hate, confusion. If the interior
is sometimes a battlefield, however, it is also at times the scene
of pure ecstasy. It is Christmas, the Fourth of July, and my
birthday all at once.
When the mind has quieted down, a new era dawns
within. Some call it emptiness, and that description appears apt
after the noisy mind has been dethroned as supreme being. In
experiencing the emptiness, one can also seem light and
weightless. I may feel like nothing but conscious air. It can be
frightening at first, because I am not used to it, but the vast
46
emptiness becomes infinite space and can be very consoling,
because now I can feel the inner freedom that I did not know
existed.
The freedom launching me into my new space age
comes from now knowing the mind on an intimate basis and
loving it. This intimacy is what many of us never reach, because
we have just taken the mind for granted all our lives. In Chapter
Five the mind was discussed as a process that has been created
from outside. Here we ned to look at the helpful or harmful
superstructures the mind builds so that we can reassert our
mastery over it. The mind can be a cruel and relentless tyrant or
a beautiful and supportive tool.
Every frame is of the mind. Judgment, choice, purpose is
of the mind. Even fear and belief are of the mind, and belief is
often the mind's attempt to get rid of fear. It would be well to
characterize different functions or elements of the mind and to
contrast them with those of the consciousness.
While the mind is a computer-like activity that processes
old data and can give us a printout at any time, the conscious is
our original nature that is ever new and is the programmer
behind the computer. The mind takes effort and is highly
conditioned as it imposes its own divisions to maintain its mind-
self. Consciousness is effortless and unconditioned; it knows no
divisions, because it is the true self.
The mind is forever desiring and wanting, because it is
basically a survival mechanism that turns violent at times.
Consciousness knows no desires and is forever watching,
because it just is and never needs to resort to violence. The mind
dwells in confusion, swinging back and forth between certainty
and uncertainty, and will eventually die. In consciousness,
certainty and uncertainty do not exist, because it dwells in clarity
47
and will go on. The secret of consciousness is, “It is always
now.”
Mind is blind. The point can be illustrated by taking
examples from a sleeping state and from a waking state. We
often wake up in the middle or after a dream and did not know
that we were dreaming. The mind could not tell. To attempt an
explanation, we say the dream was so real, but as far as the mind
is concerned, there is no difference between dream and reality.
An example from the waking state is also revealing. In
Las Vegas there is a theater-in-the-round where the projected
image on the ceiling and walls comprises three hundred and sixty
degrees. When the viewing audience, “seated” in a plane flying
over Grand Canyon, comes to a precipice and there is a sudden
drop, almost everyone in the theater gasps and becomes
frightened, as though he or she were actually dropping down into
the canyon. The mind, conditioned by its own past, does not
know the difference.
All the above are reasons why the mind must be
transcended by those seeking a higher consciousness. Mind's
essential function is to give a frame to that which is frameless. If
every frame is of the mind, if the frame of my mind becomes the
frame of the world, then I need to jump out of that window to
pure openness. As long as I identify with the mind, I cannot
know who I really am. Until the mind is transcended, I cannot
really be free. It is easy to see why many Easterners say that
identifying with the mind is the only sin there is.
If we were flying over the ocean, and no land were
visible in any direction, and below was a single ship, and I asked
you what you could see down there, you would probably answer
something like, “Just a single, solitary ship.” Most likely you
would not say anything about the water, although you were
48
aware of it and saw it in your total peripheral vision. It is just
that you were concentrated on the ship.
The mind is like that ship, and the consciousness is like
the ocean. In our self-imposed restrictions we miss the obvious,
and it is the simple obvious that can do so much for us. If we
were buoyed up by the ocean of consciousness, we would never
become shipwrecked.
Not only do we miss the overall picture, we miss all the
fun we could be having by making the development of our
consciousness the chief adventure in life. Pretend the entire earth
is covered by the ocean, and the water is telling us how it will be
when it recedes. Now we have never seen land, and so we have
no experience of what the water is talking about. All we are
aware of is water, waves, and wetness.
There are calms, and there are typhoons, but there are
only fish as living beings, because anything to survive has to be
a fish of some sort. We cannot fathom what dry land would be
like or all the varied activities that could take place there or all
the kinds of creatures that could dwell there. We just cannot
imagine buildings, bridges, fresh water, jet planes, television,
computers, or two-legged and four-legged creatures that walk
and run.
Such limitations are purely a mindset. The mind can
only guess what it would be like without conflict and confusion,
without division and suffering. Once the mind is left, real
knowing can begin.
We said earlier that this state is often characterized as
emptiness, but this emptiness is not empty of, nor an absence of,
something. It is not negative. We could call it openness or
spaciousness.
49
A house is said to be empty when construction is
completed and it is ready for occupancy. That is hardly to be
considered a negative condition, even though no furniture is yet
therein. That emptiness is really roominess or the presence of
space. Once that space or emptiness has been created, all kinds
of things can now be done in that house.
In this sense emptiness is, I believe, the most positive
potential in existence. Emptiness means empty of
conceptualization and of duality. There are no more words or
thoughts. This thoughtlessness also implies forgetfulness of the
“I.” There are no longer a knower and the known, so all objects
have ceased. There is just knowing or consciousness, an
awareness of nothing but awareness itself.
There is a feeling of still, spacious silence. If a word or
thought surfaces, it is only a ripple in a sea of calm. It is an
openness that is ever expanding and includes all. It is as though I
were once all space that contracted into my center at conception,
and now I am coming into my birthright and finding fulfillment.
Consciousness continues to enlarge its space, and this
vastness encompasses all I do. Authority, laws, thoughts, or will
power will not change me interiorly, but this experience will,
because it is I who am expanding, and I bring my own space to
all that I do. It has the power to change, because
space/consciousness is supportless. It needs nothing to exist but
itself -- and each time I set sail on that vast sea of my own inner
depths, there are launched, perhaps unknown to me, ships that
embark for me on life's journey. These ships contact whatever
and whomever I meet.
As I grow, my world becomes larger and larger. My
deepest self is unlimited. Those adept at this practice say
universes come to be and pass away within themselves. As
50
things do not happen to space but within space, so also things do
not happen to them but within them. They become everyone. If I
am no longer a stranger to myself, no one or nothing can be a
stranger to me.
Logic breaks down and gladly gives up in the face of
experience. There is only one teacher, space on all sides; and
there is only one pupil, space itself. Space becomes boundless,
and time passes away. All is now. I become one with the all.
This is the ecstasy. There is nothing but complete and absolute
fulfillment.
You may think that all this cannot happen to you. It can!
You own a three-hundred-room palace, but you are camping on
the porch! You must go in. Perhaps you do not think that such
spectacular things can happen to you, simply because you do not
know such a world exists within your grasp, as I did not know.
Truly there is nothing to grasp, because that world is in you. You
have to enter it.
The title of this chapter uses the first person singular so
that you will apply it to yourself. It would not be so hard to
become what you are if the mind were not blind, as was
explained.
The mind is outside the inner realm, where true knowing
takes place. It can be completely oblivious to this higher
intelligence. That is why in Eastern psychology the intellect is
placed on the same lower lever with the five senses. Only a
higher consciousness can see things as they are and the mind's
relative place in the broader picture.
The palace door is open. You must go in!
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Chapter Eight
THE ABC'S OF LIFE
Once we “reach” this state of emptiness or pure
consciousness, we uncover what Easterners call satchitananda,
which has been translated as “absolute (sat) bliss (ananda)
consciousness (chit).” The absolute here refers to absolute
existence or being. Absolute means one without a second, or one
without another.
Herein is found the basic reason why I can accept
myself, the importance of which we stressed in earlier chapters. I
can accept myself, because I am existence; but again, this cannot
be an intellectual concept. It must be experienced.
Truth is the experience of being, just that I am. All is
and, by that very fact, is acceptable. Everything else has been
added to that primordial reality, even our acceptance or rejection
of it. Nothing outside existence can happen to me. Is-ness is
penetrating and pervasive. It fills all space and time. In fact, time
and space are relative; they exist in the whole. The whole is what
is.
When something dies, it returns to the whole. Nothing
can be created or destroyed; it merely loses its form or
individuality. Only the whole is the truth. When the mind “dies,”
52
when it becomes a space—no words, no thoughts, it becomes
pure consciousness, and the soul is born. So, consciousness is
being, and being is consciousness.
The Stanford Research Institute issued a policy report in
1974 in which it favored a return to the “perennial philosophy”
image of man, which states that “the basic nature of the universe
is consciousness” and that man can participate in this cosmic
consciousness, because he is “a manifestation of universal
consciousness.”
Such an understanding, the report continues, comes from
the experience of oneness that resolves the polarities of space
and time, rendering all knowledge, power, and awareness
ultimately accessible to man's consciousness. When the human
begins to “wake up” and see more clearly, he becomes aware of
the direction of the higher self in this process.
This ageless view of man, the report concludes, “is
based not on observation of external events but on inner
experiences, on observations of inner events, events taking place
in consciousness. Thus it is based on direct perception and
observation, just as is physical sciences....5“
Such an experience is open to anyone who chooses to
participate. The “drop” into the state in which being and
consciousness are experienced as one, is to feel like a new
person, as though a new species were created. Once such a
happening is experienced, one can never be the same again.
Thoughts stop controlling me, because the mind is no longer
needed.
5 “Changing Images of Man, Policy Research Report 4,” Center for the Study of
Social Policy, Stanford Research Institute, 1974, pp. 40-43.
53
If I make something an object of thought – for example,
God -- the mind is needed, but in pure experience, mind no
longer has a role. Grounded in conscious being, the mind
disappears. Mind is a specific activity for relating to the “other,”
and that other can be anything, such as the past or the future.
Without the mind I can only' be here, now. This moment is all.
In that deep silence one feels that whatever is, is eternal.
My am-ness has broken the bounds of space and time. The
feeling is irrefutable; no other proof is ever needed. All doubts
are put aside forever, because forever is now.
The glory is that “I am.” This existence is mine, and no
one can ever take it from me. Grounded and feeling “I am
existing,” I know that this overflowing being and I are one. A
warmth has been kindled that melts the ice of alienation. It is as
though I am returned to some primeval innocence in which there
is no fear or sorrow.
In fact, there is perfect bliss, and this is the third member
of our Eastern trinity. There is unspeakable joy, love, peace,
harmony, which we can sum up in the word bliss, but it is not
that I am blissful or filled with bliss. I am bliss. It is not a
dependent quality but coexists with being and consciousness.
Present is Absolute Bliss Consciousness, and I am that.
We distinguish to talk about them, but they exist as one. I do not
have to go outside myself to learn that being and bliss and
consciousness make up the ABC's of my life. They wait my
uncovering within.
Although we can experience this in a pure state by
Going Inward, everything we do partakes of these qualities in
some way. All our actions exist, and attendant upon them is
some degree of consciousness. It may be more difficult to
54
understand how bliss is always involved, but it is not my purpose
to try to prove that.
I would rather underscore that whatever good we have
experienced can give us a taste of that ultimate state and help us
to partake of it in some way. The pleasure may be primarily
physical, such as enjoying sex, a good meal, a glass of wine, the
warm sun on my flesh, the smell of logs burning on a crisp, clear
fall day. The happiness may be more mental, such as a
promotion, a new car, the perfect vacation. We have also
enjoyed spiritual blessings, such as the birth of a child, rejoicing
with another who is recovering from a serious illness, the delight
when two people right for each other get married, or real love
given and received.
It is extremely important to enjoy these pleasures,
because first of all, they are; and second, the acceptance of them
is, as has been stated, a prerequisite for our growth. In fact, we
should be as perceptive as possible in their enjoyment, so that
our consciousness increases.
We cannot discount but must capitalize on whatever our
surroundings may be. They will bring sorrow at times, but they
also offer joy. These are the building blocks, and there are no
others. I need to enjoy whatever I have in my life -- my spouse,
my children, the people I work and recreate with, my pets.
Since joy or happiness is basically a state of
consciousness, it is mostly a matter of my own perception. A cat
rarely does anything to make its mistress happy; he is simply his
uncalculating self. The owner knows him and gets pleasure,
comfort, companionship, and he can feel his loyalty. This is a
magnanimous response for so little a thing as being himself! At
such a moment I need to stop for the joy of living. I need to
appreciate not just the experience but that I, the experiencer,
55
have this capacity. If a cat, being itself, can call forth so much in
us, my own interiority, once truly beheld, will call forth a
response that I cannot imagine.
I try hard to build an empire outside myself. What I am
wanting and seeking is my own growth and greatness. I am just
not always looking in the right place. By saying “yes” to all that
is, and its passing, I am really saying okay to my interiority as
well. I will kiss the gift as it goes by.
The trouble comes by my not being aware of what is
really happening. I do not want to be alert, because it demands
that I redirect my energies. It is easier to get lost in things -- my
will, my way, I want to be angry, I don't want to let her get away
with that, she should have known better. So, lack of awareness is
clearly tied up with my ego.
Awareness creates not only space to handle the situation
calmly and objectively, but also openness to my own interiority.
If I stay perceptive, I am no longer an actor caught in the play
but a spectator taking in the whole drama, including myself. I am
a watcher on a mountaintop, the experiencer of the experience,
the same as when I Venture Inward in my quiet times. It is
extremely difficult -- I would say impossible -- to do something
harmful to anyone if I am completely aware.
What hinders my development the most is my own
attachment. If I stick to anything, then I am really stuck. This
runs very deep, because my tenacity clutches my whole being in
its grasp. As long as I hold on to something, I cannot go further,
period.
How we perceive and react to situations is determined
by whether we grasp what we see and hear. Life is moment to
moment, but the mind thinks it can stop that. Do we carry
yesterday's emotion into today's relationships?
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There is an old Zen story of a master and his pupil going
into town when a heavy rain suddenly burst, and the streets
flooded. A beautiful woman in her long robes was in distress, so
the master lifted her up, carried her across the high water, and
put her down on the other side. After the two walked some
distance, the disturbed pupil asked the master how he could do
such a thing, since they were supposed to be detached from the
world.
The master answered, “I put her down way back there.
Are you still carrying her?”
Attachment wears many faces, all of them false. The
letting-go is for my own good, because only then can I be free to
love. To live in love is the ideal.
To see your attachments and to learn your personal
ABC's, you need an inner light. You practice the quiet state, not
so that your consciousness may remain a blank. The board is
erased of the mind's activity in order that absolute bliss
consciousness may be written there.
In the previous chapter you read about becoming what
you are. An apt technique here would be the Searcher method,
discussed in Chapter Three, in which you keep asking the
question, “Who am I?” After repeating the phrase many times,
and you stop saying the words mentally, the question continues
in its inward search.
Envision that interior as a large room filled with light.
Each thought, each emotion is a door with a mirror on it.
Pursuing the thought or feeling opens the door, and the light
escapes. Fighting the thought or emotion cracks the mirror, and
you get a distorted view. Acknowledging and accepting reflects
the light back to you. Now knowledge is light and self-luminous.
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Ancient yogis believed that we have an actual center of
spiritual consciousness that shines with an inner light. Knowing
illuminates objects of knowledge, which shows it is apart from
and beyond the relation of subject and object. By your silent
concentration there is no energy drain through conscious
pursuing and grappling. The light coming back shines through
the conscious and illumines the unconscious.
A higher consciousness is born as you see that it is your
nature not to fight or to follow but to be. The miracle happens!
You become one with knowing as the knower and object
disappear. What is there? Knowing! What is happening?
Experiencing without an experiencer! The darkness of the mind
drops into the abyss of light of consciousness infinitely
expanding awareness.
Enlightenment is being conscious of the heretofore
nonconscious, a grand assimilation of and by the unfamiliar. You
could have a total enlightenment experience or shafts of light
that give insights into the whole. In either case, bliss abounds.
The irony is that it takes centering yourself to give you
yourself. The ego cannot do it. The words describing the
phenomenon sound egotistical, but the experiencer afterward
laughs at such a suggestion. The “I” of your ego claims nothing,
while the “am-ness” of your being simply listens. The
multifaceted experience breaks the confines of self-centeredness
and whispers a report that your true self cannot mistake.
58
59
Chapter Nine
THE CHOICE IS MINE: JUDGMENT OR LOVE
Most of the time we feel that love is a relationship. This
relational character is true as long as we view love as object-
centered or object-inspired, and by object here we mean anyone
or anything outside oneself.
Since two poles are involved, hate is as easily present as
is love, because I allow myself to be dependent. I need to
recognize and face the fact that hate forms a part of almost
everyone's love relationship. It may be just a small part, but it
surfaces when I see how much I need the other.
It might be called amicable enmity. I look to my beloved
for fulfillment, and when I feel the other's love is not there, I
become fearful. The opposite of love is not hate but fear. Hate
may be my reaction in a threatening situation, but that springs
from the deeper emotion of fear -- fear of losing love.
Most of the time I create my own pitfalls. I have
expectations of how the other is to perform. I vacillate, moving
closer to and then further from my beloved and then closer again,
thinking that he is the instigator, whereas it has been my doing
all along. In my own mind there are barriers that must be hurdled
before I can advance. The pointed adage applies here: every time
60
I point a guilty finger at another, there are three fingers pointing
back at me. As a consequence, I fall into the pit I have dug and
suffer for it.
Judgment not only destroys love but the possibility of it.
We all too often judge for the sake of putting people down. I will
make a comparison, for example, and the ensuing judgment is
usually to raise me above someone else, which safeguards my
superiority.
We will justify judgment on the grounds that it is
necessary for action or efficiency, whereas in reality it springs
from fear of my own inadequacy, and I indulge in it to maintain
my personal stance. In judging, I reject another before he can
reject me, because I am afraid that he will not love me. Now I do
not have to love him.
Judgment creates an attitude, and that attitude defines
my position. In judging one builds the banks for the river of his
life, where his living water will or will not flow. Judgment stops
the flow. I am caught in a headlock, because judgment is of the
head, not of the heart. So often judgment is made purely to
maintain the mind's file on things and people, whereas it was not
necessary to make the judgment at all.
There is simply no need to judge. I can function without
it. In fact, I can function much better without positioning myself
and others in adversarial relationships.
As has been said of the ancient Greeks, peace is needed
for creativity and development. The mental space I allow will
give breathing room to all involved. Some will know whether
my mind is open or closed, and all will know it cannot be both at
the same time. In an atmosphere of openness, all can see and
think more clearly.
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Love is of the heart and does not judge. To paraphrase
the famous maxim, The heart has its own reasons for not
judging. The heart knows that judging is like typing on tinted
paper. No matter what thoughts and words are expressed, if I
have judged, the end result will always be colored.
If we look at what is involved in judgment, it may not be
so difficult to give up as we had thought. Just because we judge
does not mean we are right or wise6. To judge rightly, one should
know everything that is possible to know about the situation and
the people involved. One would have to be aware of all the past
determinants, the present influences, and the future
ramifications. In addition, he would have to be sure that his own
perception is total, accurate, and unbiased, so that his judgment
would be scrupulously fair to everyone concerned.
Who can claim such omniscience and discernment? How
many times have we thought we knew all the facts and were
wrong? Lesson: Do not assume. Accept. How many times have
we only guessed we were right and never found out we were
wrong? Lesson: Do not judge. Love.
Only the whole is the truth, and no one ever knows the
whole. Wisdom, then, does not consist of judgment; it is the
suspension of judgment. It is not that I should not judge; I cannot
judge. In abandoning judgment, it is clear that I am not giving up
something I have. I let go of something I assumed I had. I
relinquish an illusion. More accurately, I experience an illusion
of relinquishing.
Once I abandon judgment, a great burden is lifted from
me. It was something I have borne, and I was being crushed
6 For a brief excellent treatment on the “impossibility” of judging, which I trace
here, see A Course in Miracles, Manual for Teachers, (Foundation for Inner
Peace, 1975), pp. 26-27.
62
beneath it. It would be good at times to Go Within to forgive
myself and those I have condemned. I might also ask their
forgiveness, because I have been kicking them around in my
head and heart all this time. Forgiveness of oneself and of others
counteracts judgment. Now that I put aside that burden of
judging, a new freedom awaits me of living without care. In this
carefree attitude I am free to love.
Judgment has clouded my vision so that love does not get
through to me and I cannot love. I want to judge, consciously or
unconsciously, because I am afraid of my own rejection. There is
nothing outside that will change this internal attitude or
disposition.
No one can reject me unless I give him permission, and
the truth is that I judge and reject myself; but judgment and self-
rejection are insidious and often operate on another level as well.
By refusing to look at it inside myself, I can be rejecting myself.
This implicit judgment is one of the most detrimental I can
make, because I close myself off from openness to the infinite,
which basically I am.
I believe that in our depths everyone wants to be and to
do good. This is difficult in society with all its real or imagined
pressures and pleasures, and so if I can make you out to be bad,
or a little less good than myself, then I can be at least somewhat
good.
In the study of drug and alcohol addiction in
rehabilitation programs, it has been shown that a person takes the
drink or the drug because he wants to feel good. He may be
depressed, or sick, or angry, but he just wants to feel good again.
We also want to be good, so we take the drug of judgment to
make us feel better. Make no mistake; it is addictive. The
addiction is not so much to put you down as it is to make me
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high, superior to you, because I am afraid that I will not be loved
as I am.
We can see that all this happens because I interject the
“I.” As was noted in Chapter Seven, the mind is basically a
survival mechanism, and judgment is of the mind. The judging
mind, the ego, seeks to preserve anything and everything it
considers to be its own. The ego cannot exist alone. It “needs”
the other to stake out what it considers to be its own territory.
If I could experience but for a moment my aloneness not
my loneliness but my inalienable individuality or my
incomparable uniqueness -- the ego could never dominate me
again. My relationship with everyone would be on equal footing.
Manipulation stops. I would not try to bend another to me, nor
would I let myself be controlled by the other.
The truth of the matter is that I do not have to set up an
undermining polarity. I can choose clarity or open
consciousness, and the more I contact the clear consciousness
within, the easier it becomes to live in this openness.
True love is ruthless from this point of view. It does not
consider ego's drive to maintain itself. One is what he is and lets
the other be what he is. In this approach love or compassion is
not so much a relationship as it is a state of mind.
In many Eastern writings the symbol for compassion is
the moon shining in the night while its image is reflected in a
thousand bowls of water. The moon does not search how it can
benefit by shining, nor does it seek to make someone happy. It
does not demand that the bowls of water open to it so that it can
favor them with its light. The moon just shines. There is no “I”
or “you.” There is simply an open act, magnanimity without
meanness, a loftiness of spirit devoid of the relative notions of
giving and receiving.
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If I just shine the way I am, external situations will
become what they are. Clouds will not cover the vision. I choose
to be luminous rather than to judge. My love is not conditional,
so from this firm stance it is not a mutual relationship.
This type of love is not fatherlike in the sense of
protectivity. It is adultlike in the sense that it says, “I will love
you, and you can do whatever you choose.” It refuses to engage
in all the childish games of you versus me, of your fleet versus
mine. Such a state of love is fearless and can never be overcome,
because it is without any territorial possessiveness. It exists in
communicative openness. It is palpable and contagious, which
allows space for all to grow, because it accepts people as they
are.
This “regardless love” may be focused on one person,
but it need not be, since it is a quality or state of being. If love
consists in doing, one would soon get tired or bored and then fall
into hatred. Keeping up the act(s) demands too much effort. If I
see love as an act only, I will soon become miserable. No one
can “do” something all day long. I can be in love, but I cannot do
love.
This is not to say that I am not supposed to perform
“acts” of love. It is just that action follows being, and if I am in
touch with my true self, that creates the courses of action. Love
is part of my nature, but unfortunately it is often unrecognized.
Going Within nurtures that nature to a healthy and
enlightened self-love that directs me to whatever acts of love I
want to perform, whether it be a giving or a committing of
myself, caring for someone, or accepting responsibility. These
are all acts of love, but they flow from that reservoir of loving
self-acceptance that honors all that I am.
65
If my love comes from a loving state of mind, there is no
irksome effort involved, and my love is not restricted. I can
actually love someone who has wronged me. The love resides in
me and is not directed only at friends. I have to live in the whole
of my world and not just in a part.
Since that is the case, why choose? In Going Inward I
have practiced this choiceless awareness. This silent regard now
externalizes itself. As long as I pick and show partiality, I cannot
be total. My deeper self tells me, “Live where you are. There is
no need to choose, because the whole is worth choosing.”
The method most consistent with working on judgment
is the Seer, which basically is witnessing with emphasis on
choiceless awareness. At the heart of the matter is the judging
mind, so when you Go Within, choose not to judge. You are not
dealing with decisiveness here or its lack, but with putting
someone down or yourself up. You judge to defend your false
center and surrender, or accept, out of your true center. Accept
both, and the false melts into the true.
Complete acceptance, when it comes, means completion.
Then you live out of the one center. The path is created by each
step you take, because the path extends only to where you are
now.
To understand how this can happen is impossible
without the experience. Asking you to understand that judgment
works to your detriment and so to free yourself of it is like
asking a rock to understand that the redwood tree next to it is a
danger to it and so to become a redwood!
In Going Within, your judging mind will be seen -- for
example, your dislike for short people -- but now you place that
between your witnessing self and the source of those judgments.
66
The energy surrounding those judgments revives, releasing deep
and transforming feelings.
It suddenly occurs to you, for example, that you were
consistently outdone as a child by a person smaller than yourself.
With that insight you feel alive and enriched, because you are
operating at a deeper level than words or concepts. It all comes
together and clicks inside. Things happen and change, because
light is power. Experiencing the origin of the judgmental process
carries with it the energy to make the change.
You were perhaps ignorant, but now you see and are
responsible for your growth toward wholeness. Not accepting the
totality of life is what creates guilty feelings. Accept the whole,
and you will be whole.
67
Chapter Ten
WILLING WHOLENESS
To be whole and healthy, I need to heal the wounds of
my judgmentalism. To do that, I must surrender my will.
We have seen that in judging, we were living an illusion.
We thought that it was necessary to judge, while in reality we
saw that it was impossible to judge. There is an illusion here too,
but of a different kind: We think that in surrendering the will, we
abdicate responsibility, forsake our freedom, and become
weaklings. The truth is that only the strongest, the very willed,
can surrender.
Surrender is the ultimate in will power. Only when one
puts all his volitional force into it can he surrender. Religious
orders impose it, and master-pupil relationships demand it.
However the practice may have been abused at times, the notion
of surrender has a kernel of truth, a creative core that must be
preserved.
Surrender means acceptance. It is opening me
completely without preconception or expectation. It
acknowledges the coarse aspects of myself and seeks to
surrender them -- the will to force things within or outside
myself, my lack of patience sparked by the ego wanting its own
68
way, my refusal to be quietly aware of the whole picture, my
judgmental attitude, my attachment. All of these are blocks to
love's energy, which cannot flow to heal myself or others unless
I surrender them.
Love cannot live in negativity. Surrender is opening the
mind to life's situations and learning from them. If I accept what
befalls me, not grudgingly but with the understanding that this is
for my growth, I am opening the door to living in a state of love.
Bitterness melts. Instead of asking, “Why?” or, “Why me?” I say
rather, “Why not?”
Acceptance and love lead to goodness, and the simply
good person is the man for all seasons whom the whole world
loves but may not know why. All that love asks at times is to be
present for the other. It may be a gentle word, an observant look,
a laugh shared, a tender touch. Acceptance transforms. Nothing
negative can live in love.
In the practice of Going Within and watching whatever
life presents me, I build an indomitable spirit. I come to realize
that nothing outside me can hurt me unless I give it permission. I
steel my will, yet make it flexible for daily circumstances.
Love is both mind and will, and my regular routine of
quiet sitting exemplifies just that. I will to sit still and watch the
mind. Electing empowers. I choose to do this and thereby stir
greater forces to life. The mind will eventually drop into the
abyss of consciousness, and my experiences expand infinitely.
Wholeness can come only from wholeness, and it is the
whole of me -- spirit, mind, will, emotions, and body -- that now
experiences the world. All the senses seem to unite in one sense
69
whose perception is greater than all the parts combined7. What
comes through loud and clear is that I am one with the whole. In
not choosing my will, the whole has come to me.
It is the will that makes learning possible. The mind can
take us only so far in pursuing life's enigmas; then it must give
way to the will. The real mystery is the will. The intellect can
ask all kinds of questions, but it cannot answer them. The radical
openness that expects nothing and receives all can be rooted only
in the will. The intellect cannot understand such a stance,
because it is contrary to its own nature. Willing is not knowing.
Intellect cannot comprehend will, because the latter is rooted in
the unconscious.
To split open the mystery that lies buried in the
unconsciousness requires a thunderbolt that only the will can
throw. The intellect is too superficial a tool to get to the bottom
of things. In fact, we can say that if the mind can answer the
question raised, it is not a very deep question.
Will is the unifying principle that lies at the root of all
things, because it is the impulse in everything toward self-
fulfillment. We know the will by what it does. Will's presence or
activity is evident everywhere, even in a blade of grass. My
breathing and circulation indicate will to life. The will of
existence has brought me to where I am and will continue to
carry me on to something else.
The cosmic will is refined in me, in that I can direct my
attention. It makes me aware of myself, and from henceforth,
evolution is to be conscious. The gradual unfolding will
incorporate my inner conscious states. I become part of the
7 Evelyn Underhill in her classical work, Mysticism, speaks of the senses being
“fused into a single and ineffable act of perception....” (New American Library,
N.Y., N.Y., 1974), p. 7, 49.
70
universal will by giving up the judgmental preference of my own
will. Freedom does not mean freedom to do my will only. True
freedom tends toward a higher synthesis that includes and allows
all freedoms. One candle cannot enlighten the world; everyone's
own candle is needed.
My life impulse steers me toward an awareness without
objects, which paradoxically allows all objects to exist. It means
that consciousness is both empty and not empty at the same time.
It is no more dominated by images of things but merely contains
them. Consciousness becomes contemplation. I allow the will to
be itself and thus to love.
Many negative thoughts and feelings entered me in the
past that conditioned and formed me. Now I hardly notice their
peripheral presence as I become a positive force to influence and
direct others. Love as a state of being is a flowering of the will.
No technique is needed, not even the practice of Going Within, if
I truly love. The necessity for this inner regarding is present
precisely because I do not love. The purpose of the inner
beholding and the ideal of life are one and the same—surrender
in love.
The wholeness we seek cannot be achieved as long as
we feel that we are in a state of alienation. It was mentioned
earlier, in Chapter Four, that the California State Psychological
Association Task Force said that “spirituality is the courage to
look within and to trust.” The Task Force went on to describe
what it is we see and what we trust. It “appears to be a deep
sense of belonging, of wholeness, of connectedness, and of
openness to the infinite8.”
8 Shafranske, “Factors Associated with the Perception of Spirituality in
Psychotherapy,” Journal of Transpersonal Psychology, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1984): p.
233.
71
As we have been saying all along, we have at our
disposal, within ourselves, the means of overcoming our
separateness. Alienation is perceived as coming from someone
or something outside, above, more powerful than ourselves. As
long as we project outside ourselves the cause of our troubles,
we will never be able to see that their source is within, that we
have allowed ourselves to become chained by something that is
really our own. No person, state, race, or religion can make me
whole or free if I erect one or more of those as the barrier
between me and finding my true self. The root cause of my
suffering is myself.
If I am separated from my brother, then I am the divider.
If I judge others to be at fault, then I choose to prolong the
illusion. I can attain unity again through a personal resource that
is ever available within me. When will and consciousness come
together, we join a horizontal axis to a vertical one that extends
over any position. These two are creative of openness and
compassion that make for newness and oneness. The love so
generated will change a hurtful situation. Love can transform the
world, but from where will it come? The secret source within is
the key to originality and creativity.
For a truly loving person, boundaries disappear. From a
deep awareness he knows that all is one, so he seeks always to
implement the ancient Zen aphorism, “Not two.” Whenever he is
tempted to judge, whenever he feels the first inkling of
separateness, he says to himself, “Not two.” Reverting to the fact
that “we are not two” can bring immediate relaxation. It takes the
edge off conflict, and the heart feels at rest when a choice is not
necessary between like and dislike. There is nothing to choose,
and everything is okay.
Whatever the situation demands, wherever life takes
such an undivided person, he will follow. To others it looks like
72
choice or judgment, but an enlightened person, one with the
whole, melts into the whole. He simply moves in one direction.
An excellent technique here would be the Settler method
discussed in Chapter Three, allowing all duality and contrariness
to “settle” or unite in one word—yes. You also permit one of the
greatest of unions -- will and consciousness. You will this sitting
to happen and accept whatever consciousness brings. By
repeating “yes” again and again, you are acknowledging reality
and affirming your place within it.
The ego wants to say “no,” but you are accepting what is
and staying in the present. When will and consciousness persist
in the present, you focus energy that centers you, endowing you
with power wherever you go.
73
Chapter Eleven
THROUGH THE KNOWN TO THE UNKNOWN
The direction that one may choose to follow is through
the known to the unknown. It has been said that man fears the
unknown, yet that statement seems at variance with much of
man's history.
He has sailed across uncharted oceans, facing possible
death or no return, to discover new continents. He has lived with
and attacked contagious diseases and illnesses to find cures and
extend man's life. He chanced the splitting of the atom in hopes
of a better ultimate life for everyone. Last, he has penetrated the
unknown regions of outer space simply because, at least to a
certain degree, he is capable of doing so. It seems that fear of the
unknown has not been a great deterrent in a myriad of man's
endeavors and conquests.
Nor does it seem that man fears death because of death's
unknown qualities. There have been too many instances in which
he has not. If a man fears death, it is more likely due to the fact
that he has not truly lived and accepted life, a given and known
reality whose meaning he has chosen not to pursue for reasons
known only to himself. It seems that he does not fear death but
rather life -- that life is passing or, more exactly, that he is
74
passing without really understanding life and coming to terms
with it.
Life involves a constant dying to the moment and a
living openness to what comes next, two offerings from the same
hand that not everyone is willing to accept. Life is more beyond
than under our control. A person moves toward death from the
moment he is conceived. To live is to die, and to die is to live.
Both constitute one ongoing reality.
We have indicated in previous chapters that once
separateness is overcome, once alienation is conquered, fear is
also relinquished. If I truly accept myself and experience that “I
am” existence, I cannot be really separated from myself or from
anyone again. Rather than saying that we live in the fear of the
unknown, it would appear that the dictum of Tacitus (c. 98 A.D.)
is more appropriate: “The unknown always passes for the
marvelous.”
There are different ways to characterize this movement
from the known to the unknown. One such means is to say that
the occupied state of mind is existing in the world, and the
unoccupied state of mind is existing within. Crossing from the
occupied to the unoccupied is going from the known to the
unknown. We still know, but in a way we did not know before.
It is broader than simply a rational process. It is not that
we stay within and forget about the world. It is rather that the
unoccupied state allows for such a clarity of vision that the
clutter has been cleared and the two domains have been bridged.
It is certainly a change when I prefer the experience of
my own conscious to other experiences that motivated me
before. The preference usually comes from the very depth of the
engagement. It resembles an elicitation, as though a magnet were
drawing me to the unknown.
75
To use an image, I am the planet earth and boundless
space at the same time. Phenomena, including thoughts, are like
other planets and stars. At times I gravitate toward other celestial
bodies led by my ordinary consciousness. Then, at other times,
guided by my higher consciousness, I have an expanded
awareness with specific items no longer in isolation but forming
a part of all that is.
What happens is that consciousness leaves its state of.
pure consciousness and takes on limits to become the mind. The
frameless is in need of a frame.
An astonishing fact is that all this, the known and the
unknown, takes place within my consciousness. I become space
or silence, emptiness or openness. This can be ecstatic, but when
the mind asserts itself again, it asks, “Why? For what purpose?”
I have already discovered that being, wisdom, joy, bliss,
love are part of the one existence, as we discussed when we
treated absolute bliss consciousness in Chapter Eight. The more
advanced stage does not consist in questioning, because that
would constitute a duality. Intellect and will have come together,
and the person is to be what he is and to be with what is. Without
discursive thought he allows himself to experience directly
whatever presents itself. It is letting go and going on.
We might say that it is natural to move on this course,
toward the unfamiliar, the unknown, or as it has been called, into
the mystical. Albert Einstein seems to lend credence to this
direction when he said near the end of his life:
“The mind can proceed only so far upon what
it knows and can prove. There comes a point
where the mind takes a higher plane of
knowledge, but can never prove how it got
76
there. All great discoveries have involved such
a leap.9 “
We would venture to say that the finding of the true self
is the greatest discovery one can make. To put it in figurative
language, it is as though one is walking in a familiar valley
where he knows the landscape, because he has been there many
times before, but as he proceeds, the terrain becomes less and
less familiar until he realizes that he is on uncharted ground.
He comes to the end of the valley, and there is a cliff in
front of him with no place to go. The abyss is deep, and one
cannot see the bottom. He must leap, and he knows that, so he is
frightened. He makes the leap, and suddenly he discovers that he
can fly. The abyss is conquered, and the unfamiliar becomes
friendly. He is in joyful awe as he realizes that the purpose of his
life is to go through the dark valley of unknowing10
.
Anyone can experience this, and that is what Turning
Inward is all about, but one cannot strive for such a happening.
One has to relax into himself and do nothing. The mind needs to
be clear and silent, unencumbered and undirected. In that state of
unknowing, the explosion happens.
What I am becomes one with what is. There is no more
the knower and the known. What is, is infinite, and it overcomes
us. We become one with the moment and simultaneously one
with the totality; but no matter how much one experiences the
unknown, it remains to be known. The luminous silence keeps
9 R.W. Clark, The Life and Times of Einstein, (Harry N. Abrams, Inc., N.Y., N.Y.,
1984); pp. 339-340.
10 William James gives many examples from various religious persuasions of
seekers who have come through the known to the unknown in his masterful
work, The Varieties of Religious Experience, (The Modern Library, N.Y., 1936);
pp. 407-411.
77
deepening and expanding. Real knowing is always in touch with
the unknown. One sees no end to this process of silent knowing.
Only what we experience has real effect upon us, and
only by experiencing the mind directly will it be satisfied. This is
the launch that frees us from within. I have to know what I am.
The mind needs to be what it is and perform its proper function,
but instinctively it knows that it is not the ultimate guide to truth.
When that fact is realized, the rock that is the mind sinks
to its correct place in the pool of consciousness, and the water
level of my whole being crests at its optimum level. Mind and
consciousness attune to each other, and deep satisfaction ensues.
As long as I identify with my mind, I will be misled,
because I am not my mind. This is the discovery attested to by
Eastern seers and Western mystics for thousands of years, but
until I experience it, the truth is someone else's, and that will not
free me. I have to make it my own. I have to tap into the energy
of the universal consciousness and allow its live current to be the
charge that sparks me.
To illustrate the point of directly experiencing a larger
entity, which is my true self, I like to take an example from
nature. In the long transition from a prairie or grassland to a
maple forest, many forms of vegetation evolve and eventually
die out. Tall grass and shrubbery, scrub oaks, assorted saplings,
huge red and white oaks, and finally basswood and maple -- all
have their day in the sun. Once the climax forest is achieved, as
ecologists call this culminating stage, we have an established
maple grove with a crown of thick foliage that allows little
sunlight to reach the forest floor.
Many smaller trees and plants will not be able to
survive, but the wild ginger plant has found a way. It developed
large, dark green, heart-shaped leaves that are able to store solar
78
energy; it is only in recent times that we have discovered that
such an admirably adapted leaf allows the plant to live the entire
summer while many others die out because of lack of sunlight.
The wild ginger captured a share of the universal energy and
draws upon that treasury at will, which allows it to thrive in a
thick and shady forest.
Analogously, I must realize that I am not my mind but
share in a much-larger entity that is greater than I am standing
alone. I can draw upon it anytime, because it is my true energy
source.
I also need to dream. Many brilliant groundbreakers in
the past, such as Thomas Aquinas and Albert Einstein, were
considered average or even stupid, because they were not in the
same place as their teachers. Their elders thought that they were
lost, whereas they were really ahead, blazing a trail. They could
not stand pat on the established and accepted. They dared to
dream, “What if...?” That is the potential of each of us, because
the expansion of consciousness makes geniuses of us all.
Nothing is enough until I am enough, and now suddenly
I am enough, because I have seen into myself and exposed the
myth of the solitary ego. It was just a notion anyway and had no
reality. It died away, because in one-hundred-percent receptivity
-- watching, listening, perceiving -- there is no “I.” I give up the
battle of trying to achieve something, because I already have it.
The new “I” is limitless.
Now when I Look Into myself, I initiate new states of
consciousness with which I was not previously familiar, and
these form the viewing stand for an ever-expanding horizon. A
kind of new man has been created.
Everyone is unique, and one must realize what his
uniqueness is. One does that by not defining boundaries but by
79
being an adventurer, a pioneer of self. We set boundaries,
because we live on borrowed accessories that weigh us down,
the beliefs of others that we have adopted. True life and the true
self borrow nothing. A man of this new “knowledge” no longer
believes; he knows. Doubt was a natural power to be used to
dispel beliefs until one experiences truth. Doubt was needed in
darkness, but not once the light has shown.
The light by which we now walk comes from the
reshaping of our consciousness. Since the structuring of the “new
consciousness” is dependent upon what has conditioned the
individual, there will be a fresh outlook and yet a universality to
which he must subscribe. Being is so pervasive, he wonders why
he has not seen it that way before.
Moreover, that being is one, and it no longer confronts
him as he recognizes that he is truly a part of it. He has broken
through his illusions and now welcomes the oneness of all
reality. He does not need to maintain his selfhood, because he
belongs to a larger self.
One becomes aware of the life and order of the universe.
There are intimations but also pronouncements of immortality.
Intimations come in seeing the truth. As long as I see the truth,
experience the truth, there is a duality while awaiting the
possible enrapture. Pronouncements of everlastingness come in
being the truth, where there is no separation between the seer and
the seen, where the experiencer and the experience are one.
The individual form passes until there is pure
consciousness and love. One no longer seeks to possess
anything, because he is everything, and he needs no affirmation
outside himself. All that is left is a continual unfolding of what is
within. More in wonder than in question does he utter, “What am
I?” and each one's unique answer comes. “I am what I am.”
80
Since the mind has returned home to the frameless
consciousness, there is no one to comment or recognize. If there
is no longer a reporter, then the person is free at last. The
unknown within has fused with a larger unknown to create a new
entity without attachments, which is both known and unknown.
Its regenerative course is to redirect energies from self to a
greater awareness of others.
Whereas once the subject just naturally acted out of self-
motivation, he is now sensitive as he regards the consequences
of his actions upon others, and even searches to find responses
that will benefit those around him. By Going Inward he is able to
be alone and be fulfilled. By Going Outward he is able to love
and be fulfilled.
His fulfillment comes from the realization that the ocean
has indeed been poured into a drop. He cannot feel deprived of
anything, because he is a limitless sea. The diagram11
of waves
on the water illustrates his uniqueness and oneness with all.
11
Adapted and modified from Herbert B. Puryear and Mark A. Thurston,
Meditation and the Mind of Man, (A.R.E. Press, Virginia Beach, Va., 1986); p. 24.
81
Finite
Infinite
The drop of consciousness discovers it has an ocean of
depth. The waves of thinking, feeling, and willing follow a new
flow as currents below the surface converge in him to course as
living waters.
The states that he so often experienced briefly in Turning
Inward are present. The mood is one of joyous anticipation
without expectation. The attitude is that of unknowing
understanding. The feeling is one of gratefulness and not just for
gifts received.
Silent awareness sees an ocean of mystery. That is no
longer frightening, because he now knows that he is that ocean.
The sureness comes from love, which is the key and has been
throughout. It uncovers beauty and sees possibility. What had
been problems on the intellectual and verbal levels melt away in
experiential love.
Conscious
Subconscious
Unconscious/
Superconscious
Infinite
82
Thoughts leave. Love remains. All else were merely
devices to find it.
83
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Tom grew up in the Pittsburgh area attending strict
public schools that had a mix of races, religions and cultures.
After high school, at the prodding of an older brother and a
widowed mother, he entered the University of Pittsburgh to
major in writing. Feeling lost and wondering what his own
"purpose" was, he left after his junior year to enter the Catholic
seminary. There he majored in philosophy, finding peace and
order and wallowing in the writings of Plato, Aristotle, Thomas
Aquinas, and the mystics. He was ordained a priest and joined
the Sulpician Society (S.S.) whose sole purpose is the training of
young men for the priesthood. After three lesser degrees he was
sent to the renowned University of Louvain, Belgium, to get his
doctorate in theology.
Having successfully completed his degree work, he
taught theology and counseled seminarians for thirteen years in
Kenmore, Washington, Baltimore, Maryland, Plymouth,
Michigan, and Washington, D.C. at the Catholic University of
America. Feeling lost again and inspired by Pope John XXIII on
a visit to Rome, and by the radical decrees on non-Christian
religions the Pope fostered at Vatican II, Tom left the priesthood
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to mine the riches he felt lying in other pastures which he
studied. While being married and a general manager in a
business venture and a counselor in a private clinic, he continued
his research and study of other religions. During this time, the
past sixty years, he continued his daily meditation, often twice a
day. Tom’s writings are the result of his years of study and
prayerful meditation.
Happily married to Helen over forty years, he lives in
Dearborn, Michigan with their charming cat, Charmer. As co-
worker and true friend, Helen recently set up a website
(www.findingoneness.com), for Tom to continue to share his
research and work. His purpose is to give to others the riches he
finds in the world's mystical traditions in the pursuit of the
Oneness of everyone/everything.